Read The Legend of Kevin the Plumber Online
Authors: Scot Gardner
She looked at the van and jogged down the driveway. She spotted my bags beside the letterbox. She pulled the top open on one then the other.
âAre these yours?' she said.
I nodded.
She laughed a single disbelieving âhoh' and shook her head. âGo home, Gary.'
She was around the corner by the time I'd collected my bags. I should have walked straight past, I thought. They would have called her when the phones were fixed. Sometimes, for Gary Sleep at least, it's better not to try to help. Well, fuck you. Fuck youse all.
I
had to lay the bottles of Coke down so they'd fit in Ash's little fridge. I told her what had happened during the flood and she called me a legend. Not bagging me like Gel would have, but in a nice way. I told her about Mrs Daly saying she didn't want me anywhere near her daughter and she laughed.
âDoesn't want you near her? If she was
my
daughter, I'd be trying to hook you guys up. She'll shit her pants if she finds out who her daughter's going out with now.'
âWho?'
âGel.'
âBullshit.'
She shook her head. âWe're all camping at the youth hostel last night, right? Vanessa's mucking around with Gel and a heap of other guys in the poolroom. Her mum comes looking for her at . . . I dunno . . . eleven o'clock or something. I mean, I was pretty hammered but I'd swear she was in the corner with Gel playing a bit of tonsil hockey. This afternoon, I called by the van to help them
load some of their shit into the trailer and she was there. She had friggin make-up on and she wouldn't stop giggling. Gary? Gaz? Where are you going?'
âI'll be back,' I said, and ran for the caravan park.
The sun was setting. Most of the puddles in the town had vanished. A loaded trailer was in the parking bay at Aggie and Gel's caravan.
The van was thumping. I rapped on the door and let myself in. Aggie nodded hello and made some room for me on the bench seat. He was flicking through a skating mag. He slapped it closed and turned down the music.
âWhere were you last night?'
âAt home,' I said. âSounds like it was all happening at the youth hostel.'
Aggie nodded from the shoulders. âWent off.'
âI thought you guys were moving back home again?'
âIt was supposed to be this weekend. We've packed all our shit but we can't get the trailer over the river, hey.'
âHave you seen Vanessa?'
He looked at me for the longest time, then jabbed both pointer fingers at the door to his mum's bedroom. I dived off the seat and banged on the door. It opened.
âVanessa?'
There was a flurry of activity and Vanessa was standing beside the bed in her jeans and bra, her crumpled top held over her chest. Gel lay back on the bare mattress in his boxers, hands behind his head, smiling like a retard.
âSorry,' I said.
âNah. It's fine,' Vanessa said. âWe were just talking and that.'
She was wearing my ring. The silver skull ring Ash had given me was laughing at me from her knuckle.
âYour dad's in hospital. Your mum's already over there.'
âOh my god. What happened?'
I shrugged. âHe's going to be okay.'
She dragged her top over her head and I could see dark stubble in her armpit. She thumped through the van and slammed the door behind her.
Gel just lay there, still smiling.
âYou're a sick bastard,' I said.
âThanks,' he said, and sat up.
âShe's thirteen.'
He shrugged. âDidn't stop you, mate. Old enough to bleed, old enough to butcher, eh?'
I shook my head. âIt didn't happen.'
âYeah, but you wanted it to.'
âSo? I wanted to root your mum at one stage, too. It didn't happen.'
âAnd you call
me
a sick bastard.'
âYeah, because you would have.'
He huffed a laugh but the smile had fallen from his lips.
âJust leave her alone,' I said.
âOr what?'
I didn't think. I dived at his throat and pinned him to the bed. He kicked at the air and grabbed at my fingers. His eyes bulged and he squawked.
âGet off!'
âLeave her alone or I'll rip your fucken head off.'
I shoved and his throat clicked. I let him go.
Aggie was standing in the doorway. His eyes were wide and frightened like Kevin's had been that morning. âThanks, Gary,' he said, as I pushed past. He slapped me on the back and I jumped. âSomebody had to do it.'
âDrinks at Ash's place tonight if you're up for it.'
âNice. Might see you there later.'
Ash and I were fairly well oiled by the time Aggie arrived. I looked over his shoulder as I let him in to the bungalow.
âNah. He's at home having a bit of a sook,' Aggie said. âReckons you nearly killed him. Reckons he's going to lay charges.'
âWhatever,' I said, and we laughed. I pictured Gel's red face as I held his neck and I remembered the ring. It certainly looked like my skull ring on Vanessa's hand. Gel would have given it to her. Fucked if I knew how he'd got hold of it in the first place. I didn't want to know. He would have nicked it and given it to Vanessa. Anything for a bit of action.
There was something different about that night. We had a couple of cones â the last of Ash's stash â and got all happy and shitfaced. Chugged on the cigars I'd bought and I don't mind saying that for the money, they were shit. Aggie drank hard to catch up and we didn't stop talking. We talked some crap, as you do, but the words kept flowing and at one o'clock we were sitting cross-legged on the floor of the bungalow with Ash's Tibetan monk music on real low and Aggie says to me, âSo, what's she like?'
âWho?'
âYour perfect woman?'
I let the question settle in my foggy head. It was something I'd never asked myself, but I thought I knew the answer. âShe has to have two arms and two legs. No . . . hang on. That's not really an issue. She has to have . . . you know . . . the bit where babies come from.'
âA cabbage patch?' Ash said.
âNo,' I said. âThe F word.'
Aggie and Ash looked at each other, then at me.
âFingers?' Aggie asked.
âNo!'
âFallopian tubes?' Ash said.
âNo. Yes. Well, them too.'
âWhich F word were you thinking about, in particular?'
âYou know . . .'
âNo. That's why we're asking,' Aggie said.
âFagina,' I whispered.
They both squealed and lurched onto their backs. Ash's head hit the mattress on her bed and bounced before she slumped to the floor, paralysed by laughter.
âWhat?'
They just kept laughing and I kept asking what and they didn't tell me and I didn't get the joke. Eventually, Ash sat up again with a moan.
âWhat else?' she said.
âPardon?'
âYour perfect woman,' Aggie sighed.
âI don't know,' I said, but I did. Sort of. I knew more than I did before my birthday. I knew, as tempting as it may seem, it wasn't a thirteen-year-old who had the hots
for me (and everybody else). I knew it wasn't a different woman every day, though that had its appeal as a fantasy.
âCome on,' Aggie said. âYou must know something. What, do you like big tits or Asians or she-males or what?'
And my well-charged brain just started firing. My mouth let the words out. âI don't really mind what she looks like. I know that sounds like I'm desperate but I'm not. I want to be with someone who's my mate. Someone who I can rave with and get pissed with. Someone who I can trust and who doesn't mind a bit of . . . you know . . . humpy bumpy every now and again. I want someone who laughs a lot and doesn't spend all day in front of the fucken mirror.'
Ash nodded. Aggie shook his head. âI never picked you as a poofter, Gaz.'
Ash honked a laugh.
âWhat?' I said.
âYour perfect woman is a bloke,' he said.
âBullshit. I'm not â'
âAnd if that's as close as you'll get to asking me straight, I accept. I
will
marry you, Gaz. Come here, you stud,' he said, pushed me onto my back and kissed me full-on on the lips.
I shoved him off and spat and wiped my mouth and eewed at the feel of his stubble rubbing against my face. They were laughing then. Aggie wiped his mouth with the back of his hand and rubbed it on my leg.
âWhat about you then?' I asked him. âWhat's your perfect bloke . . . I mean woman like?'
âMe? I like big tits. Two good mouthfuls on the front and two good handfuls of arse.'
âDo you mind a bit of fluff in the bum crack?'
âWhaaat?'
âYou just described Homer, one of the guys I work with. Only his man-boobs are bigger than a mouthful and he wears a bit of fluff in his arse crack.'
âOr Ruby,' Ash said. âThe big bloke who works for the council.'
Aggie shivered. âSick.'
Aggie and I looked at Ash.
âNo. Not me. I'm going to be a nun. I don't look at blokes. I'm a lesbian and I'm going to be a nun.'
âOoh, stop it,' Aggie said. âYou're making me bar up.'
She looked at the ceiling and hummed. âI'm really not that fussy. He has to have a good personality.'
Aggie scoffed. âWhat the fuck has personality got to do with anything? Oh. You mean he has to have a ten-inch personality. Or bigger.'
Even through the fog of grog and weed I could feel Ash looking at me. And even through the fog I could see her smile. You've got nice lips, I thought. I bowed my head. One day I'd have the balls to tell her that and see what happened.
Aggie burped the first three notes of âBrand New Death'. Ash changed the CD and we wrote ourselves off. Big night.
I
woke up in my own bed at three on Sunday afternoon. My head felt like I'd just had surgery so I went back to sleep. At quarter to five I woke up again with a bog knocking at my back door and a terminal case of the munchies. Had to get up. The house was empty, except for Trixie who scratched at the toilet door while I slumped on the bowl. I showered, spat my seed at the glass then washed the walls with a soapy hand. I made and ate nine toasted cheese sandwiches and watched the local news.
They had a bit of aerial footage of the bay and Mullet Head. The reporter said most services had been restored but the army's bridge idea didn't work. Some dude dressed in camo said they were waiting on gear to be delivered from Puckapunyal. The river had gone down heaps. They were using bulldozers to dig a new road around the old bridge. Two days before we'd be able to drive in and out again, they reckoned. I wondered if I'd be going to work in the morning. I tried the phone. It hummed like a real one and I found âDaly K & M 37 Aquarius Bvd Mlt Hd' in
the phone book. I could feel my pulse in my ears as the phone rang.
âHello?' It was Mrs Daly.
What was her name? Maude? Mary?
âHello, Mrs Daly. It's um . . . Gary Sleep here.'
âOh. Hello, Gary.'
âI was just ringing up to see how Kevin was and that. Is he home yet?'
Her voice changed tone, grew quieter. âNo. He's not back yet. They're keeping him in overnight again. He's had some tests and they'll get the results from them tomorrow.'
âDo they know what happened?'
âOh, yes. It's his prostate. Kevin's had problems with it for years and never got anything done. It's his own bloody fault. Wish he cared about his own internal plumbing as much as he cared about everybody else's.'
I huffed a laugh into the mouthpiece and the phone fell silent.
âThanks,' she said. âAnd I'm sorry.'
âNo worries there, I â'
âI mean it, Gary. Sorry I spoke harshly to you yesterday. I didn't realise . . . Thanks for sending Vanessa over and thanks for phoning the ambulance for Kevin. You probably saved his life.'
âNo worries.'
âSeriously. The ambos said another hour and his bladder would have burst.'
âYeah? No worries.'
âCan you say anything other than “No worries”?'
âHa! Yes, sorry. I . . . I don't know what to do about work tomorrow. Whether I should try to make my way over to Christmas Bay in the morning or what.'
âPhil would be the one to talk to about that. Have you got his number? It's silent. I think Kevin's got it in his phone here . . . '
She gave me the number and thanked me again. I said no worries two more times without even thinking about it. She laughed and said goodbye.
Phil answered the phone with a mouthful of something.
âOh, g'day, Gary. How are you holding up there, mate? Did you get flooded out?'
I told him what Kevin and I did on Friday, the saga of Kevin going to hospital in the air ambulance and asked him what I should do.
âYour rostered day off tomorrow, mate. Don't have to worry about it until Tuesday. We can't get the van back here until after the cowboys finish fixing the bridge. Kevin might be back on deck by Tuesday. If not, I'll arrange for Homer or someone to come and pick you up. I'll give you a call tomorrow night and let you know. You might as well go and get pissed tonight, ay? Ha! Just make sure you're fit and ready for Tuesday.'
He said he was going to take Kevin some flowers in hospital. Or a blow-up doll. I told him the room number and that I'd see him on Tuesday.
He doesn't care, I thought. I'd seen the shit-scared look in Kevin's eyes. He was really sick and Phil was making a joke of it.
I counted my cash on the bed. $297.60. Where had it
all gone? I would get paid again on the Wednesday after next and I'd finish up on that Friday and go. I found my dad's phone number on a ratty folded piece of paper in the change pocket of my wallet.
I'd looked at it a hundred times since he'd given it to me but I'd never called him. Never had reason to. Until now.
I called but there was no answer.
I was in my room playing Halo on Sharon's Xbox when a car pulled into the driveway. Doors slammed. I could see Grandad's skid-mark brown Fairmont through my window.
âGary!' Mum hollered. âGet in here, now.'
I paused the game and found Mum in the kitchen. âWhat?'
âClean up your bloody mess,' she said.
Yep, nice to see you, too.
Sharon stepped past me and rolled her eyes. I put some hot water and bubbly stuff into the sink and washed my plate and knife. I'd almost finished wiping the bench when Grandad appeared in the doorway. Not the best medicine for a hangover.
âYou'd make someone a lovely wife some day, Gary.'
âFuck off,' I spat.
He heard me.
âWhat did you say? What did you just say?'
âI told you to fuck off,' I said. âPull your fucken head in.'
âGary!' Mum squealed. âGet in here, NOW!'
I shoved past Grandad and into the bathroom where Mum was pointing at my clothes and towel on the floor.
âI just finished picking up your putrid bloody work clothes and washing them. That is not where these belong, is it?'
I grabbed an armload of the party clothes I'd slept in and dumped them on my bed. Mum had followed me into the room. She grabbed my sleeve. Her voice was an acid whisper. âDon't you EVER talk to your grandfather like that again. Do you understand me?'
I shook her off.
âDo you?'
âWhatever.'
âI wish someone would knock that bloody chip off your shoulder you arrogant little â'
âYou're bagging the wrong person,' I said. âGrandad's the one who starts it every time. He hates me and I hate him. He's hated me ever since I was born. Before I was born. Haven't you noticed? Maybe you should learn to live with it like I have.'
âOh, it's never your fault.'
Grandad stood in the doorway. âLittle bastard's just like his father,' he said.
âDad, keep out of it.'
âFuck off, fuck off, fuck off. Out. Get out of my room. Go. Move.'
I pushed Mum's shoulder and she slapped me.
I knew it was coming. It made me suck a breath but I kept pushing her. Grandad backed away and Mum clawed at the doorframe.
âOut. Get out. Move.'
I kept pushing. Her nails bit into the wood and I pushed
harder. I slammed the door and it hit her foot and let out a crack. I forced her foot back and kept closing the door.
âShift. Piss off. Leave me alone.'
They were both shouting my name. Mum's hands pulled out of the doorframe and I slammed it. Slid the bolt home and rolled onto the bed.
They banged and shouted that I should open up. I lay there and smiled.
I hit redial on the phone. Still no answer.
The banging stopped. I could hear crying. Sharon was crying. Then she was shouting. âWhy can't you just leave him alone? Why do you have to fight all the time? You're destroying the family. Why can't you leave him alone?'
I could hear them all talking in the lounge room. I could hear their voices but not their words.
Mum tapped politely on the door half an hour later.
âGary?'
âWhat?'
âI can't cope with this anymore.'
âI'm onto it. I'm moving out. Two weeks and I'll be out of here.'
âWhat do you have in mind?'
âQueensland.'
âWhat?'
âYou heard me.'
âAnd live where? And more to the point, do what?'
âDad said I could stay at his place for as long as I want.'
âGreat. Good idea,' Mum said sweetly. âMaybe you could get a job with him too . . . '
âYeah, I will.'
âAnd at the end of your four-month apprenticeship, you'll get a certificate that says you're a fully qualified loser with needle tracks up your arm. The works.'
âWhatever,' I said. âAt least he's doing something with his life.'
âYou don't know him, Gary. He's sick. You'd be lucky to last one day with him.'
âBetter than living in this shithole until I die.'
She was quiet for a long time then her words came through the door. They were flat, no emotion. âGo for it, Gary. Go for it.'